Thanks for the link to TAW3 Steve, haven't seen that one before. Shall
have to ckeck it out!

I know this costs money, but an account with Browsercan cam make this
process much easier as well. Just submit a couple of URLs from your
site, come back in a little while and check the display in more
browsers that you probably need to worry about. Then depending on the
degree of the rendering issue, and how important the browser is, you
can decide on whether to address it or not.

You can also use what they call Remote Access to log in to one of
their machines and test flyout menus, javascript and other interactive
elements.

We've found it pretty useful.

On 03/03/06, Steve Olive <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> On 03/03/2006, at 11:09 AM, Anja Kennedy wrote:
>
> > Hi
> >
> > can anybody give me some tips regarding website testing?
> > what browsers and versions to test in?
> > which mac OS are required?
> > and what model mac would be most suitable?
> >
> > thanks!
> >
> > Anja
> >
>
> Testing can be done with Firefox & Opera on all platforms - Windows,
> Mac OS X & Linux. You then have some OS specific browsers - Windows =
> IE6, Mac OS X = Safari, Linux = Konqueror and/or Epiphany/Galeon
> which both use the Firefox rendering engine. Safari uses the khtml
> (Konqueror) rendering engine. All of these browsers are free so you
> can install Firefox & Opera and your OS's default browser (IE -
> Safari) which gives you very good compatibility testing quickly.
>
> After downloading Firefox (http://www.mozilla.com/firefox/central/);
> don't forget to use the tools that are available with Firefox
> Extensions - IMHO every web developer should be using the following
> extensions when testing pages (or just normal browsing for that matter):
>
> 1. Web Developer - https://addons.mozilla.org/extensions/moreinfo.php?
> id=60&application=firefox
> 2. HTML Validator - https://addons.mozilla.org/extensions/
> moreinfo.php?id=249&application=firefox
> 3. TAW3 - https://addons.mozilla.org/extensions/moreinfo.php?
> id=1158&application=firefox
> 4. View Rendered Source Chart - https://addons.mozilla.org/extensions/
> moreinfo.php?id=655&application=firefox
> 5. View Formatted Source - https://addons.mozilla.org/extensions/
> moreinfo.php?id=697&application=firefox
>
> These are just a few of the developer tools available but make
> validating HTML/XHTML and CSS quick and easy. The accessibility with
> TAW3 takes some getting used to ;-)
>
> Hope this helps!
>
> Steve Olive
> Bathurst Computer Solutions
> e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Mobile: 0407 224 251
> Web: www.bathurstcomputers.com.au
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Jason Foss
http://www.almost-anything.com.au
http://www.waterfallweb.net
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North Rockhampton, Queensland, Australia
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